I didn’t check this, just asked ChatGPT:
✅ What Sefaria already offers (natively)
On Sefaria’s website, for the Five Books of Moses, many verses can be heard chanted (with trop / cantillation) in Ashkenazi melody: open any passage → scroll to the “Torah Readings” section in the Resource Panel → click ▶ to play. help.sefaria.org+1
Sefaria remains a free, open-source library of Hebrew/English Tanach, Talmud, commentaries, etc. Wikipedia+1
Thus: if you want a proper chanting of Tanach verses, that built-in feature works — but only on a device where Sefaria displays the audio icons properly (typically a desktop / laptop browser), not always reliably on mobile. hebcal.com+1
🎧 For general Hebrew/Torah text (or other works) — use your OS/browser text-to-speech
If the text has no native chanting audio (e.g., many commentaries, non-Tanach, etc.), you can still listen by using the text-to-speech (TTS) or screen-reader utilities built into your OS or browser.
On Mac
Open System Settings → Accessibility → Read & Speak (or “Speech,” depending on your macOS version). Apple Support+2Apple Support+2
Enable “Speak selected text when the key is pressed” (or similar). Set or accept a keyboard shortcut (default often Option–Esc or Cmd–Esc). Apple Support+1
In your browser, open the page you want on Sefaria. Select (highlight) the Hebrew (or English) text you wish to hear.
Press the chosen shortcut — the Mac will read aloud the selected text. You may also adjust voice, rate, etc., in settings. Apple Support+1
This works for any text on screen — Tanach, Talmud, commentaries — even if Sefaria has no built-in audio.
On Windows
Use the built-in screen reader Narrator (no extra cost or download needed). To activate: press Windows-logo key + Ctrl + Enter. Microsoft Support+1
In Narrator settings you can adjust voice, speed, and reading control (pause, skip, etc.). Microsoft Support+1
Open Sefaria in your browser, navigate to the text you want, and let Narrator read the web page aloud.
Alternatively, many browsers (or third-party TTS / “Read Aloud” extensions) may read the page — but for simplicity Narrator suffices out-of-the-box.
⚠️ What to watch out for & limitations
The built-in Sefaria chanting-audio is only for Biblical-text (Tanach), not for Talmud, commentaries, halachic works, etc. help.sefaria.org+2help.sefaria.org+2
If you rely on OS TTS (not chanting), the pronunciation is generic — not a proper trop, and lacks the traditional cantillation melody.
Text-to-speech may mispronounce complex Hebrew (e.g. rare words, Aramaic, vowel marks, cantillation marks), especially in classical or masoretic text.
📚 Recommended workflow depending on your goal
To hear an actual Torah verse with trop (for learning leyning or melody): use Sefaria’s native “Torah Readings” audio.
To hear general texts — mitzvot, Gemara, Rishonim, commentaries — to follow while reading or for reviewing: use Mac’s Speak-Selection or Windows’ Narrator.
For deeper learning (text + translation + commentary): open the Hebrew + English side-by-side on Sefaria, and optionally use TTS on the English side so you can follow meaning while reading Hebrew (or vice versa).
